Kevin Sumlin Made Right Move Naming Trevor Knight Starter

Folks with no skins in the game have different schools of thought on naming a starting quarterback in the spring. One thought asks why end competition almost a half-year before Week 1, while the other sees it as a move to start readying for the season. Count me in the latter group.

So, yeah, Trevor Knight has ample reason to be confident. He has the same kind of rock-star quality about him Johnny Manziel exuded in his Heisman Trophy, when both Texas A&M and Kevin Sumlin barreled to the forefront of the national landscape.

More importantly, Knight offers that captivating persona without the baggage that plagued Manziel’s encore.

Knight suffered through a slump of different kind. After running circles around Alabama in the 2014 Sugar Bowl, he didn’t jet around to sporting events, sleep through camps or come under NCAA investigation. Knight took the quicker and much more unfortunate route to football oblivion: he struggled to perform.

His 56.6 completion rating and 12 interceptions against just 14 touchdowns may have been as much endemic of Oklahoma’s stilted play-calling as anything to do with Trevor Knight. Nevertheless, Texas Tech transfer Baker Mayfield got the keys to Lincoln Riley’s high-octane offense in 2015, leaving Knight to spot-duty.

A partnership with Sumlin promises Knight the opportunity to play in a wide-open offensive set. New Aggies offensive coordinator Noel Mazzone’s scheme is friendly to running quarterbacks, evidenced in Brett Hundley’s performance under Mazzone at UCLA.

The fit’s natural, so why delay the inevitable?

Sumlin’s mired in mediocrity since Manziel’s departure, due in large part to instability at quarterback. Competitions before the 2014 and 2015 seasons lingered into fall camp, with the Week 1 starter in both cases — Kenny Hill and Kyle Allen — transferring following that same season.

Sumlin tried one way, extending competition to August (and beyond). Altering the plan and investing in a starter from the spring might be the kind of shake-up A&M needs to again compete in the SEC West.